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2007 New England Patriots–New York Giants game

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Notable 2007 NFL game
This article is about a 2007 Week 17 regular season game between the Patriots and Giants. For Super Bowl XLII between the same two teams about a month later, seeSuper Bowl XLII.

2007 New England Patriots–New York Giants game
Giants Stadium (seen in 2006)
New England Patriots
(15–0)
New York Giants
(10–5)
3835
Head coach:
Bill Belichick
Head coach:
Tom Coughlin
1234Total
NE31371538
NYG7147735
DateDecember 29, 2007
StadiumGiants Stadium
East Rutherford, New Jersey
FavoritePatriots by 13
RefereeMike Carey
Attendance79,110[1]
TV in the United States
NetworkNFL Network,NBC*, andCBS*
*Game was simulcast
AnnouncersBryant Gumbel andCris Collinsworth

On December 29, 2007, during the final week of the2007 season, theNew England Patriots defeated theNew York Giants, 38–35, atGiants Stadium inEast Rutherford, New Jersey. In what became a preview ofSuper Bowl XLII, the game was a close comeback win for the Patriots, giving them the first undefeated regular season since the1972 Miami Dolphins, the only undefeated regular season since the league expanded to 16 games, and the only undefeated 16 game season as the NFL season was expanded to 17 games in 2021.

The game was originally notable for its television coverage as it was officially broadcast and produced byNFL Network but was alsosimulcast nationally on bothNBC andCBS. This was despite the game originally being planned to be aired exclusively on NFL Network. The decision to also simulcast the game on NBC and CBS occurred due to the high anticipation for the game, political pressure from the Northeast to make the game more widely viewable, and also because NBC was the primary broadcast network forSunday night games, while CBS in 2007 normally held therights to air games when the away team was anAFC team. The teams would later meet inSuper Bowl XLII, in which the Giants won 17–14, ending the Patriots' hopes of a perfect season.

Network television coverage

[edit]

When the NFL announced its 2007 regular season schedule, the game was scheduled to air exclusively on theNFL Network, as was the case with all Saturday NFL games beginning with the 2006 television contract in an attempt to boost carriage of the NFL Network by cable providers.

The game was also offered to local stations in each team's home market under along-standing league policy for games televised on cable networks. In the case of the Patriots–Giants game, the local rights were originally sold toWCVB-TV andWMUR-TV (bothABC affiliates owned byHearst-Argyle Television) in theBoston /Manchester market, andMyNetworkTVowned-and-operated stationWWOR-TV in theNew York City market.[2]

It was a prime time matchup of regional rivals, but as the Patriots moved closer to a perfect season, the game became even more important. Therefore, the NFL Network increasingly promoted the game via television commercials[3] on other stations. It was clear the game was one of the most anticipated in recent history, and could therefore serve as an important promotion for the NFL Network, which had tried unsuccessfully over the previous year to expand its viewership by becoming included as an "extended basic service" on the major Americancable television providers such asComcast andTime Warner Cable.[4]

Political pressure from the Northeast to make the game more widely viewable preceded the decision to simulcast the game onCBS andNBC. (NBC was the primary broadcast network forSunday night games, while in 2007 CBS normally held therights to air games when the away team was anAFC team.) TheSenate Judiciary Committee's chairperson,DemocratPatrick Leahy ofVermont, and ranking minority member,Republican[5]Arlen Specter ofPennsylvania, sent a letter to the NFL threatening to reconsider the league'santitrust exemption under U.S. law.[6] SenatorJohn Kerry of Massachusetts had pressured the league and cable companies to settle their dispute so "no die-hard Pats fans will be shut out from watching their team take aim at football history."[7]

In the end, 15.7 million viewers watched the game on CBS, 13.2 million on NBC, 4.5 million on the NFL Network, and 1.2 million on the aforementioned local stations in New York, Boston, and Manchester.[8] The game was the most watched program on television since the2007 Academy Awards[9] and the most watched regular season NFL game in more than 12 years.[9] It marked the first time that an NFL game was simulcast on two or more networks on a national level sinceSuper Bowl I, which aired on CBS and NBC, the respective homes of the NFL and theAmerican Football League (AFL) at the time.

The broadcast was a complete production of the NFL Network, and because the NFL Network had a unique opportunity to promote its brand by being simulcast on network television, several unusual events occurred during the broadcast. First, CBS and NBC did not air their usual studio shows leading up to the game. Instead, the networks came on the air at 8:00 eastern time and simulcast the final 15 minutes of the NFL Network's 6+ hour pregame show. The NFL Network used that time mostly to promote the channel and its programming, encouraging viewers who did not receive NFL Network to call their television providers and ask for it. A "demo reel" of NFL Network programs aired during the simulcast portion of the pregame as well. This demo reel and the encouragement to call television providers were repeated on the halftime and postgame reports, also NFL Network produced. During the game itself, several on-screen graphics were shown encouraging viewers to both call their television provider and go to the NFL's "Get NFL Network" website to send automated emails to television providers.

Moreover, the NFL Network, which had devoted over 30 hours of programming in the week prior to the Patriots-Colts game in Week 9, devoted over 60 hours of programming to the game, consisting primarily of re-broadcasts of nine Patriots games from the 2007 season; they also had a special countdown clock for the game which appeared over 1,000 times in the week leading up to the game, and live coverage of Patriots press conferences that week. Moreover, NFL Network aired a six-hour pregame show devoted to the game; no NFL game, including Super Bowls, had received more coverage.[10]

InCanada,TSN held the rights to the game, as it did for all NFL Network regular-season telecasts. After the NBC / CBS simulcast was announced, TSN's parent broadcast networkCTV announced it too would carry the game, allowing CTVsimultaneous substitution rights over U.S. stations broadcasting the game.[11] This meant that, in areas of eastern Canada receiving their "big three" network affiliates from Boston, the CTV signal was seen on four different basic-cable channels, in addition to TSN's broadcast (which only differed from CTV in terms of network identification and some commercials).

This controversy did not lead to the NFL offering theThursday Night Football package to other networks, and so the games remained exclusively on NFL Network through 2013. TheThanksgiving night game, which was part of the package until 2011, was sold to NBC beginning in the 2012 season. On February 5, 2014, it was announced that CBS would air eight, early-season Thursday night games during the2014 NFL season in simulcast with NFL Network, with the remainder airing on NFL Network exclusively.[12][13]

Game summary

[edit]
2007 Week Seventeen: New England Patriots at New York Giants – Game Summary
Quarter1234Total
Patriots31371538
Giants7147735

atGiants Stadium,East Rutherford, New Jersey

Game information
First quarter
Second quarter
  • NE -Randy Moss 4-yard pass fromTom Brady (Stephen Gostkowski kick), 14:55.Patriots 10-7.Drive: 8 plays, 50 yards, 4:01.
  • NYG -Domenik Hixon 74-yard kickoff return (Lawrence Tynes kick), 14:44.Giants 14-10.Drive: 0 plays, 0 yards, 0:11.
  • NE - Stephen Gostkowski 45-yard field goal, 9:59.Giants 14-13.Drive: 8 plays, 39 yards, 4:45.
  • NE - Stephen Gostkowski 37-yard field goal, 1:59.Patriots 16-14.Drive: 11 plays, 61 yards, 5:41.
  • NYG -Kevin Boss 3-yard pass from Eli Manning (Lawrence Tynes kick), 0:13.Giants 21-16.Drive: 8 plays, 85 yards, 1:46.
Third quarter
  • NYG -Plaxico Burress 19-yard pass from Eli Manning (Lawrence Tynes kick), 9:12.Giants 28-16.Drive: 7 plays, 60 yards, 4:10.
  • NE -Laurence Maroney 6-yard run (Stephen Gostkowski kick), 4:00.Giants 28-23.Drive: 8 plays, 73 yards, 5:12.
Fourth quarter
  • NE -Randy Moss 65-yard pass from Tom Brady (Laurence Maroney run), 11:06.Patriots 31-28.Drive: 3 plays, 65 yards, 0:23.
  • NE - Laurence Maroney 5-yard run (Stephen Gostkowski kick), 4:36.Patriots 38-28.Drive: 9 plays, 52 yards, 5:17.
  • NYG - Plaxico Burress 3-yard pass from Eli Manning (Lawrence Tynes kick), 1:04.Patriots 38-35.Drive: 11 plays, 68 yards, 3:32.
Top passers
Top rushers
Top receivers

First quarter

[edit]

In their final regular season game, the 15–0 Patriots traveled to Giants Stadium, trying to win a record 16th game of the season. With the game scheduled to air on NFL Network, not available on some cable providers, the NFL arranged a three-way simulcast of the game with CBS and NBC, the first time an NFL game was broadcast on three networks, and the first national simulcast of any NFL game since Super Bowl I.[14] The New York and Boston television markets both had a fourth channel, a local television station in each respective market covering the game. In the week leading up to the game, the NFL Network aired a record 65.5 hours of game-specific coverage, including a six-hour pregame special which matched the longest NFL pregame show, including for a Super Bowl, on a single network.[15]

On the second play of the game, the 10–5 Giants moved into the Patriots' red zone on a 52-yard completion fromEli Manning toPlaxico Burress. Three plays later, the Giants took the lead on a 7-yard touchdown pass toBrandon Jacobs. The Patriots responded with a pair of 14-yard completions toRandy Moss andWes Welker; Welker's catch, his 102nd of the season, set a Patriots franchise record.[16] The Patriots then converted a fourth down, and on their next fourth down,Stephen Gostkowski made a 37-yard field goal. The Patriots would regain the ball at midfield following a Giants three-and-out, and completions toDonté Stallworth and Welker put the Patriots in the Giants' red zone, where they would end the quarter.

Second quarter

[edit]

On the first play of the second quarter, Brady completed a 4-yard touchdown pass to Moss, giving the Patriots a 10–7 lead. The play broke one record and tied two others: the Patriots' 560th point of the season surpassed the1998 Minnesota Vikings's record of 556 points; the touchdown pass was Brady's 49th, tying Peyton Manning's2004 record; and Moss recorded his 22nd touchdown catch of the season, tyingJerry Rice's1987 record.

As a result of a 15-yard penalty for unsportsmanlike conduct after the touchdown (Moss was flagged for dancing withBen Watson in the endzone), the Patriots kicked off from the 15-yard line. Giants wide receiverDomenik Hixon received it from the Giants' 26-yard line and proceeded to run for a 74-yard touchdown return, retaking the lead for the Giants. Starting from their own 33-yard line, the Patriots moved into Giants territory on a 13-yard Maroney rush and 8-yard Faulk reception. Brady's 8 passing yards on the play gave him 4,557 for the season, breakingDrew Bledsoe's1994 franchise record of 4,555 yards.[16] After the drive stalled, Gostkowski recorded his second field goal for the game, reducing the Giants' lead to 14–13. Following a Giants punt, the Patriots mounted a drive that resulted in Gostkowski's third field goal of the night, from 37 yards, after a 3rd down end zone pass to Moss ricocheted off of linebackerGerris Wilkinson's helmet. With 1:54 remaining the half and the Giants trailing 16–14, Manning completed five of his first seven passes to move from the Giants' 15-yard line to the Patriots' 3-yard line. On second down with 18 seconds remaining, Manning threw his second touchdown pass of the game, this time to Boss, to take a 21–16 lead at the half.

Third quarter

[edit]
Tom Brady on the sideline with teammates Randy Moss andJabar Gaffney, after throwing for his record-breaking 50th passing touchdown of the season. Behind him are Patriots punterChris Hanson (left) and kicker Stephen Gostkowski.

After the Patriots began the second half with a three-and-out, the Giants increased their lead to 12 points on a 19-yard touchdown catch by Burress from Manning. Facing their largest deficit of the season, the Patriots drove to the Giants' 16-yard line with several Brady completions. A pass interference call against the Giants’ Wilkinson gave the Patriots the ball at the Giants' 1-yard line. Brady's end zone pass to linebackerMike Vrabel was no good, and an illegal formation penalty moved the Patriots back 5 yards.Laurence Maroney then scored on a 6-yard touchdown run to cut the Giants' lead to 28–23. The next three consecutive drives to end the third quarter and begin the fourth resulted in punts.

Fourth quarter

[edit]

The Patriots gained possession of the ball with less than 12 minutes remaining in the game. On the second play of the drive, Brady attempted a deep pass to Moss, which was underthrown and dropped. On the next play, Brady attempted another deep pass to Moss, who caught this one for 65 yards, setting two more NFL records: Moss set the record for most touchdown receptions in a season (23) and Brady set one for touchdown passes (50).[16] The touchdown, Brady's last of the game, also brought Brady's touchdown-to-interception margin to +42; Peyton Manning held the previous record, +39 during the 2004–05 season.[17] Additionally, this gave Brady a 6.25:1touchdown-to-interception ratio on the year, a new single season NFL record (Brady himself would shatter this record againthree seasons later). The Patriots converted the subsequent two-point attempt, their only two-point attempt of the season, on a Maroney rush to take a 31–28 lead with 11:15 remaining. On the Giants' ensuing drive, Hobbs intercepted a Manning pass intended for Burress at the Patriots' 48-yard line. After driving to the red zone, a 5-yard catch by Moss marked his 1,493rd reception yard for the season, breakingStanley Morgan's1986 franchise record of 1,491 yards. On the subsequent play, Maroney scored his second touchdown of the game on a 5-yard run; Gostkowski converted his last PAT of the season to give the Patriots a 38–28 lead. Gostkowski finished the season a perfect 74-for-74 on PATs, eclipsingSt. Louis Rams kickerJeff Wilkins'1999 record of 64-for-64.[18]

With 4:36 left in the game, the Giants drove the ball to the Patriots' 4-yard line, and two plays later, Manning completed a 3-yard touchdown pass to Burress, Manning's fourth for the game. But when the Giants tried anonside kick, Vrabel recovered the ball, and Brady knelt thrice to end the game with a final score of 38–35 and seal the Patriots' undefeated regular season.

Starting lineups

[edit]
New EnglandPositionPositionNew York Giants
OFFENSE
Jabar GaffneyWRPlaxico Burress
Matt LightLTDavid Diehl
Logan MankinsLGRich Seubert
Dan KoppenCShaun O'Hara
Russ HochsteinRGChris Snee
Ryan O'CallaghanRTKareem McKenzie
Benjamin WatsonTEKevin Boss
Randy MossWRAmani Toomer
Tom BradyQBEli Manning
Laurence MaroneyRBBrandon Jacobs
Wesley BrittTEFBMadison Hedgecock
DEFENSE
Ty WarrenLEMichael Strahan
Vince WilforkNTLDTBarry Cofield
Richard SeymourRERDTFred Robbins
Mike VrabelLOLBREOsi Umenyiora
Junior SeauILBLOLBReggie Torbor
Tedy BruschiILBMLBAntonio Pierce
Adalius ThomasROLBKawika Mitchell
Asante SamuelLCBAaron Ross
Ellis HobbsRCBSam Madison
Rodney HarrisonSSJames Butler
James SandersFSGibril Wilson

Officials

[edit]
  • Referee:Mike Carey (#94)
  • Umpire: Dan Ferrell (#64)
  • Head linesman: Kent Payne (#79)
  • Line judge: Mark Perlman (#9)
  • Field judge: Buddy Horton (#82)
  • Side judge: Tom Fincken (#47)
  • Back judge: Bill Schmitz (#122)

Aftermath

[edit]

With the win, the Patriots' joined the1972 Miami Dolphins (14–0),1942 Chicago Bears (11–0), and1934 Chicago Bears (13–0) as the fourth team to record an undefeated and untied regular season. Their 16 wins also set a record for most regular season wins in a single season.[16] The victory was the Patriots’ 19th consecutive regular season victory, breaking their own record set during the2003 and2004 seasons. The Patriots finished the season with a +315 point differential, breaking the 1942 Bears' record of +292, making 37–17 the average score of a Patriots game during the regular season.[16]

The game did not have an impact on the playoff seeding for either team. The Patriots already clinched the AFC's top seed, while the Giants were locked into the 5-seed, as they had already clinched the best record among NFC teams who did not win their division, but could not catch the division-leadingDallas Cowboys.

In the playoffs, the Patriots defeated theJacksonville Jaguars in the Divisional Round, 31–20, and theSan Diego Chargers in the AFC Championship Game, 21–12. This moved the Patriots to 18–0 and one win away from a perfect season. The Giants defeated theTampa Bay Buccaneers in the Wild Card Round, 24–14, the Cowboys in the Divisional Round, 21–17, and theGreen Bay Packers in the NFC Championship Game, 23–20 in overtime, setting up a Super Bowl rematch.

The Giants wonSuper Bowl XLII, 17–14, denying the Patriots their perfect season and leaving the 1972 Dolphins as the only team to play an undefeated regular season and postseason. In the 16-game era from 1978-2020, the 2007 Patriots were the only team to post a 16–0 regular season record. As of 2025, no team has posted a 17-0 regular season record.

The next season, the Patriots won their first two games, extending their record regular season winning streak to 21 games. They lost to theMiami Dolphins in Week 3, ending the streak. This record winning streak would be later broken by theIndianapolis Colts, who won 23 straight regular season games from20082009.

Four years later, the Giants and Patriots met inSuper Bowl XLVI. The Giants would win this Super Bowl as well, by a score of 21–17.

Despite the controversy surrounding the broadcast of this game, the NFL kept theThursday Night Football exclusively on theNFL Network through 2013. The package was then split between the NFL Network andCBS beginning from 2014 to 2015[12][19] and between the NFL Network, CBS, andNBC from 2016 to 2017.Fox purchased the rights to broadcast mostTNF games from 2018 to 2022. In order to satisfy its cable carriage agreements, the NFL Network retains seven exclusive regular season broadcasts per year. These includeTNF games in Weeks 2 and 3, Gamesplayed in London with a 9:30 am ET start, and late-season Saturday games.

The game's impact was summarized byScott Graham onNFL Films' subsequent hour-long replay of the contest ("Perfect Ending", an episode ofNFL Films Game Of The Week): "Never had a meaningless game carried more meaning."

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"New England Patriots at New York Giants - December 29th, 2007".Pro-Football-Reference.com. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2025.
  2. ^Hemingway, Jon (December 28, 2007)."Stations Cry Foul Over NFL Simulcast Play".Broadcasting & Cable. RetrievedNovember 8, 2014.
  3. ^"Joe's Diner Ep. 16".NFL Network.YouTube. December 27, 2007. RetrievedJanuary 4, 2008.[dead YouTube link]
  4. ^Weiner, Evan (6 December 2007)."NFL Network Can't Beat Cable Industry".The New York Sun. Archived fromthe original on 9 January 2008. Retrieved4 January 2008.
  5. ^Specter was a Republican in 2007, but would later change his affiliation to the Democratic Party in 2009
  6. ^Saunders, Dusty (January 2, 2008)."COMMENTARY : Antitrust threat prompted NFL's reversal".Rocky Mountain News.Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. Archived fromthe original on February 10, 2008. RetrievedJanuary 4, 2008.
  7. ^"Patriots-Giants Game To Be Simulcast On NBC & CBS".KXAN-TV. Associated Press. 27 December 2007. Archived fromthe original on 6 January 2008. Retrieved4 January 2008.
  8. ^"Patriots draw big TV numbers in finishing perfect regular season".International Herald Tribune. Associated Press. January 2, 2008.Archived from the original on January 19, 2008. RetrievedJanuary 4, 2008.
  9. ^ab"Patriots-Giants most-watched show of current TV season".Patriots.com. December 30, 2007. Archived fromthe original on May 19, 2011. RetrievedDecember 30, 2007.
  10. ^"All roads lead to Patriots-Giants on NFL Network and NFL.com".NFL.com. December 26, 2007. Archived fromthe original on December 25, 2007. RetrievedJune 28, 2008.
  11. ^Ratings Alert – Perfect Patriots Win Saturday Night for CTV/TSNArchived 2011-06-09 at theWayback Machine, CTV press release, December 31, 2007
  12. ^ab"CBS to broadcast eight Thursday night football games in 2014".CBS Sports. RetrievedFebruary 5, 2014.
  13. ^"CBS-NFL marriage extended to Thursday nights in 2014".USA Today. RetrievedFebruary 5, 2014.
  14. ^"Patriots' historic game to be available to all of America, after all".NFL.com. Associated Press. December 26, 2007.Archived from the original on December 27, 2007. RetrievedDecember 26, 2007.
  15. ^"All Roads Lead to Patriots-Giants on NFL Network and NFL.com".NFL Network. NFL.com. 26 December 2007. Archived fromthe original on 25 December 2007. Retrieved26 December 2007.
  16. ^abcde"Patriots at Giants: Game Notes".Patriots.com. December 29, 2007. Archived fromthe original on May 19, 2011. RetrievedDecember 30, 2007.
  17. ^Reiss, Mike (January 1, 2008)."Extra points".Boston.com Reiss' Pieces. RetrievedJanuary 1, 2008.
  18. ^"NFL Record and Fact Book: Individual Records: Points After Touchdown".NFL.com. December 29, 2007.Archived from the original on December 28, 2007. RetrievedDecember 30, 2007.
  19. ^"CBS to broadcast NFL games on Thursday in 2014".USA Today. RetrievedFebruary 5, 2014.
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